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When she'd gone, Ba.s.so settled himself more comfortably in his chair. He listens to her, Ba.s.sano thought, with a degree of amus.e.m.e.nt, and he has to be careful what he says. "So," he said. "The complicated stuff."
Ba.s.so nodded. "All right," he said. "Tell me, what's the essence of a good deal?"
Ba.s.sano thought about that. "You make a profit," he said.
But Ba.s.so shook his head. "A good deal is where both sides make a profit," he said. "That way, both sides will want to deal with each other again. It's better to keep the other man happy and make ten per cent ten times than rip the other man off and make thirty per cent once." He paused to ma.s.sage his forehead with his fingertips, then went on: "Same, I believe, in international politics. If you're going to take something from someone, you'd be wise to give them something in exchange. Otherwise, you're just a pirate, and quite soon you'll annoy all your neighbours, and they'll gang up on you and do you harm."
Ba.s.sano frowned. "So you're going to buy the Mavortines' iron."
"In a way," Ba.s.so said. "The essence of a good deal is that you get something you didn't have before; something you need. What the Mavortines need, rather desperately, is government."
Ba.s.sano laughed. "They might argue with that."
"Actually, I don't think so. The country's on its knees. It's not like this is how it's always been. Two hundred years ago, there was plenty of land to support plenty of sheep and cows and not many people. Also, they had a government, of sorts; they had tribes and clans, and there was a kind of a system-pretty relaxed, but none the worse for that. But then some fool came along, about a hundred and seventy years ago, and tried to unite the country into a standard monarchy. He rooted out the tribe and clan structure, so when they got rid of him there was nothing left of it. As a result, you've got hundreds of villages, all at daggers drawn with their neighbours; you've got poor husbandry leading to overgrazing, leading to endemic famine. They need someone to run the place. Just ask Melsuntha-she'll tell you all about it, when you've got a couple of hours."
Ba.s.sano realised he was kneading his left middle finger between his right forefinger and thumb, something he only did when he was anxious about something. He made himself stop. "And that makes it all right for us to go in and take the place over?"
Ba.s.so nodded. "I believe so," he said. "And after that, we use Mavortine troops to invade Scleria. Then we do the same in Auxentia." He stopped and grinned; Ba.s.sano was staring at him. "I imagine you'd like to know why."
"If you wouldn't mind."
Ba.s.so dipped his head. "Sooner or later," he said, "there's going to be a war involving us, the Sclerians, the Auxentines and whoever we sign up to do the actual fighting. But we won't be fighting each other. We'll be fighting the Eastern Empire. And," he added, "we'll lose."
Silence, for a while. Then Ba.s.sano said: "That seems hard to believe."
"Only because you don't know the facts," Ba.s.so replied. "We all grew up thinking the Empire has had its day. We learn about it in history, and we're told it outgrew its strength, crashed and fell apart. Well, that's true, up to a point. They've had a hundred years of miserable civil wars, on and off, with first one general seizing power, then another. But that's changing now. There's a strong family in charge now; a son recently succeeded his father without bloodshed for the first time in eighty years. The whole Empire is so thoroughly militarised that they can't live without war. The whole economy's based round the army, which is huge and very well trained. If they stop fighting each other, they'll start fighting someone else. They want to get back what they lost. The way they see it, everything to the west belongs to them as of right. They won't trade with us, they won't even talk to us; they don't recognise our governments, because they think of us as rebels and upstarts. When they come, if we aren't united and ready for them, they'll roll over us in about ten years."
Ba.s.sano looked at him. "You're serious."
"It's happened before," Ba.s.so said simply. "Eight hundred years ago, when the Empire was first formed. What they had then, and what they've still got now, is practically unlimited manpower. And remember Cantacusene."
"Remind me," Ba.s.sano said helplessly.
Ba.s.so laughed. "Six hundred years ago," he said. "Cantacusene, the Empire's last great general. He invaded the West and conquered Scleria and half of Auxentia in just five years, before his emperor got nervous about how popular he was with the troops, and called him home and had his eyes put out. Once he'd gone, everybody went back to normal and pretended it hadn't happened. But it happened all right." Ba.s.so shook his head. "Cantacusene was a military genius, an exceptional man; but they have a nasty habit of breeding exceptional men out there. Besides, it wouldn't take a military genius to wipe the floor with us, or the Sclerians. The Auxentines would be a bit harder to knock down, but on their own they wouldn't stand a chance in the long run."
"All right," Ba.s.sano said carefully. "Suppose for the sake of argument you're right. Surely what we need is an alliance, not a Vesani empire."
"Sure." Ba.s.so shrugged. "And in an ideal world, you'd be able to pick beef puddings from a beef pudding tree. Simple fact: a voluntary alliance won't happen, and if it did it wouldn't last five minutes. It's got to be imposed, by force. I'd rather we did it than either of the other two. They aren't quite as enlightened as we are."
Ba.s.sano was quiet for a while. Then he said: "And that's the reason."
"It's one of the reasons," Ba.s.so said. "If there's one thing I should've taught you by now, it's that there's always more than one reason."
"All right," Ba.s.sano said. "Give me another."
Ba.s.so yawned. Then he said, "The Vesani aren't farmers. We make things and sell things. We run banks. We build and sail ships. But there's thousands of Vesani citizens who don't know where their next meal's coming from; thousands more who just get by. If we build up the fleet, plant colonies, there'll be work for everybody, and for all the foreigners who dream of coming here for a better life. Better still, the system pays for itself. I can't feed all the hungry families in the City by taxing the rich; they'd have my head on a pike. So we let the foreigners do it; and in return, we sort out the mess they've got themselves into, and we stand a chance against the Empire when it decides to take back its birthright." He looked at the expression on Ba.s.sano's face and laughed. "I know," he said. "It's appalling, isn't it? Wanton aggression, imperialism, bloodshed and untold human misery, and here I am, calmly planning it all. I ask you, Ba.s.sano, what sort of a monster have you got for an uncle?"
But Ba.s.sano shook his head. "That's not the reason," he said.
"Quite right." Ba.s.so nodded. "It's two good reasons, you have to grant me that. But not the reason."
"Which is?"
"Simple," Ba.s.so replied. "I want you to succeed me as First Citizen."
Once, when Ba.s.sano had been walking down Portgate, shortly after dark, a smartly dressed young man walking the other way had stepped out in front of him, slapped him across the face, and walked off. For quite some time, he was too confused to think, let alone register the pain of the slap. Later, he'd rationalised that the man was drunk or crazy, that it had actually happened, and it meant absolutely nothing. At the time, though, he'd had extreme difficulty believing in it, as though he'd been called upon to believe in a Cazar tribal G.o.d.
"You're serious," he said.
"Well, of course." Ba.s.so seemed surprised by his reaction. "It's the logical step. I'm limited by law to three terms of office. I intend to serve four-there'll be a crisis in the third year of my third term; they'll insist that I stand again to see the Republic through, and they'll pa.s.s a special dispensation. I'll protest like crazy, until they make me realise I have no choice. Four threes are twelve: in twelve years, you'll take over from me. It'll have to be you. They won't accept anybody else."
"You'll see to that."
"Of course," Ba.s.so said, as if thanking a waiter for bringing his soup. "In twelve years' time, we'll be fighting in Auxentia, and the Empire will be a year away from the Sclerian border. The fleet will be the biggest employer in the Republic, the public revenues will be three times what they are today, and taxes will be lower in real terms. I'll be getting the Bank ready to hand over to the twins. I plan to retire altogether when I'm sixty. You'll serve four terms and beat the Empire. You'll have to make your own mind up about what you want to do after that. I doubt I'll be around."
Ba.s.sano couldn't help laughing. "You've decided which day you'll die on, then."
"Don't be ridiculous," Ba.s.so said with a grin. "But I don't suppose I'll last very long after I give up the Bank. I'll have done everything I want by then, and living just for the sake of it never struck me as a worthwhile activity."
"Uncle." Ba.s.sano tried to find some words, but it was like catching elvers. "What makes you think I'd even want to...?"
"It's the only thing for you," Ba.s.so said quietly. "Because you're my nephew, which ent.i.tles you to aim high. Because you've got a brilliant mind..."
Ba.s.sano shook his head. "You're giving me reasons again," he said. "I've had it up to here with you and your reasons. Tell me straight, just for once. Why would you want to do this?"
For a moment Ba.s.so looked as if he was going to refuse. Then he said; "I owe it to your mother."
Ba.s.sano opened his mouth, closed it again, and said, "Oh."
"I killed her husband," Ba.s.so said, "and ruined her life. She won't let me even try and make it up to her. So I've got to make it good through you."
Ba.s.sano closed his eyes for a moment. "Yes," he said, "I can understand you thinking like that. And..."
"Yes?"
"Mother would like that," he said heavily, because it was true. "She'd be pleased that I was following in my grandfather's footsteps. Not yours, of course. I think she'll persuade herself that you never existed."
Something in the way Ba.s.so's face didn't move when he said that. "Well, then," Ba.s.so said. "There's your reason."
Ba.s.sano breathed out, something he'd neglected to do. "Uncle," he said. "When I wanted to join the Bank, you wouldn't let me. You said you didn't want me to turn into you, or something like that. But now you want me to-"
"It's not the same thing." Ba.s.so was shaking his head vehemently. "You're nothing like me, not in the things that matter. And when you're First Citizen, you won't do the job the way I'll have done it. You'll be completely different. Which is why I've planned it this way. It'll take a man like me to build the empire. It'll need someone like you to make it work."
Ba.s.sano sighed. "More reasons."
"Be quiet a minute and listen," Ba.s.so said urgently. "I meant what I said. Building an empire calls for a b.a.s.t.a.r.d like me: an unprincipled, amoral, calculating butcher who'll run the world like a bank. If it's going to survive and actually mean anything, it'll need someone like you: someone with brains, who cares deeply about right and wrong, and who never wanted the job to begin with. A better man, in every respect; but a better man couldn't do what I've got to."
Ba.s.sano looked at him, trying to see behind his soft, bright eyes. "Or else the Eastern Empire will roll right over us."
"Yes," Ba.s.so said, and his grin was entirely humourless, "but that's not the reason. Paying my debt to your mother isn't the reason. It's because it's inevitable. By that stage, there will be no other possible candidate; and I'm not talking about the opinions of the voters. There has to be a clear succession, from me to my appointed heir, or else the whole thing'll come apart. The twins..." He sighed. "They're good boys, and I've treated them appallingly badly. It's not their fault, any of it, but I can't forgive them for having that woman as their mother. I'm not even sure I'm their father. They can have the Bank-a third each, and you'll have the other third, by right; it's what your mother should have had, so the twins will understand. They're devoted to you, of course. It's the only thing we have in common."
The thought that he was to inherit a third of the Charity & Social Justice, an idea that had never even crossed his mind as a wild fantasy before, left Ba.s.sano gasping for breath. Before he could say anything, Ba.s.so went on: "You'll need money, to live on, and for politics. It makes it so much easier when the Treasury runs out of money; you just say, 'don't worry, I'll pay for that', and then you don't have to bother with cutting deals with the Optimates. You'll be able to be your own man, in everything. I believe in you, Ba.s.sano. In fact, you're about the only thing I believe in, apart from luck. I have faith that you'll make the world a better place." He grinned unexpectedly. "Not exactly my first priority. It's something I tend to do by accident. You'll do it on purpose."
Ba.s.sano took a deep breath. "You overestimate me," he said. "What've I ever done to make you think I'm the saviour of the world?"
"You're not," Ba.s.so said. "Not yet. That's why you've got to go to Mavortis. By the time you've finished there, you'll have grown into the man I take you for." He looked away, took a walnut from the bowl on the table to his left, squeezed it in his right hand till it cracked. "You can refuse, of course. Entirely up to you."
Ba.s.sano burst out laughing. "I can refuse," he said. "Oh, right. You're going to melt down the world and recast it to suit me, but I can just say, thanks but no thanks, and that'll be that."
"That's right," Ba.s.so said, picking bits of nut out of the handful of crushed sh.e.l.l. "I'm quite certain you won't, but you do have that option. You don't have to decide here and now," he went on. "Think about it, if you like. There's no mad panic."
"And if I say no?"
Ba.s.so shrugged. "Then we'll have to think up something else instead," he replied. "But it won't be nearly as good."
"I think..." Ba.s.sano stopped, then made a hopeless gesture. "For pity's sake, Uncle," he said. "An hour ago, I was thrilled to bits and deeply happy just because I'd pa.s.sed some stupid fencing test. Now you tell me I'm going to be the Emperor of the West. You really know how to screw up a person's evening."
"Here's a hint for you," Ba.s.so replied, busy sorting bits of nut from sh.e.l.l splinters. "If you hadn't pa.s.sed the exam, I wouldn't have made you this offer."
"What's that supposed to...?"
"If you hadn't increased production at the Mint by a third and cut costs by ten per cent, I wouldn't have thought up the idea," Ba.s.so went on. "Same goes for your grades at the Studium."
Ba.s.sano leaned forward, hunching his thin shoulders. "Do I get Aelius?" he asked.
"Of course," Ba.s.so replied. "I want you to learn from him, the way I learned from Antigonus. You'll have other advisers, of course. I don't expect you to do anything except watch and learn for the first year. After that-well, you'll take it at your own pace. I have every-"
"Aelius," Ba.s.sano interrupted. "Have you discussed this with him? What does he think about it?"
"I haven't told him yet," Ba.s.so replied.
"About me?"
"Any of it." Ba.s.so cupped his hands and sucked down the last of the nut fragments. "No point getting him involved until you've agreed. But he'll be all right. He likes you."
"He's only met me a couple of times," Ba.s.sano said. "At functions, for a few minutes."
"True," Ba.s.so replied. "But I've told him about you."
"I'd have thought I was exactly the type he'd have no time for."
"On the contrary," Ba.s.so said. "He's got far more issues with me, but we get along just fine." Ba.s.so made a show of dusting off his hands, then drank some wine. "Aelius and Antigonus are the two people I've relied on to get where I am. He'll take care of you, provided you listen to him. Which you will."
Ba.s.sano looked down at his hands, as if he'd only just noticed he had them. "You really think I can do this."
"If you want to do it, yes," Ba.s.so said. "If your heart's not in it, say so and we'll forget the whole thing. You can be a lawyer or an art historian instead."
Ba.s.sano closed his eyes and laughed. "You really think..."
"Yes." Ba.s.so interlaced his fingers. "One thing I'm never wrong about is people. I'm sure you'd make a really fine lawyer or an exceptional art historian, but I believe you'll enjoy this a whole lot more."
"Enjoy," Ba.s.sano repeated, as though the word was meaningless. "What's that got to do with it?"
"Everything," Ba.s.so said. "In that respect, I do believe you are a bit like me. Really," he added, "do you think I'd be doing this job if it wasn't a whole load of fun?"
It was probably the last thing he'd have predicted his uncle to say, but now that he'd heard it, he decided it was probably true. "Fun," he repeated.
"The best there is," Ba.s.so said. "But so far, I've barely scratched the surface. Let's see, what exactly have I done since I got this job?" He started counting on his fingers. "The Auxentine war: well, that was really unfinished business left over from the previous regime. It turned out all right, but it's the stuff of footnotes. The citizenship law: that was fun, but it was only just a start. Refining the currency, I enjoyed that. The plague was a mess-we all tried really hard to do something intelligent, but in the end we might as well not have bothered. The Treasury raid was mostly Aelius, so the only real pleasure I got out of that was proving I'd chosen the right man. It's been a pretty hectic year, and all I've really done is react and cope. I like it so much more when I'm making the running." Ba.s.so yawned. "You're going to say, my idea of fun isn't the same as yours. Quite true. That's why you'll be better at this job than me. Every day when I turn up for work, there's this nagging feeling at the back of my mind that sooner or later I'm going to get found out; someone's going to realise that I'm not fit to be in charge of the Vesani Republic, and then I'll be thrown out into the street. I feel like a boy who's stolen his father's horse. You won't be like that. In many ways you're a whole lot more grown up than me."
Ba.s.sano sighed, long and deep. "I'm going to have to think about it," he said. "Is that all right? Really?"
"Of course," Ba.s.so said. "Now, if you'd clapped your hands together and said, 'that's fantastic, when can I start?' I'd have been really worried."
Ba.s.sano looked at him. "And the real reason? Come on, you can tell me."
For a long time, Ba.s.so sat very still and looked at him. Then he said, "The real reason?"
"The real reason."
"Simple." Ba.s.so put on a solemn face, which made Ba.s.sano want to laugh. "To avoid a catastrophic drain on the public finances, the Bank will be investing heavily in all this. In return for five million nomismata, we get a quarter share of all revenues, in perpetuity. We stand to make an enormous sum of money, and since Antigonus is too old to go, you're the only one I'd trust not to rip us off." He smiled. "I'd have thought you'd have worked that one out for yourself."
Ba.s.sano shook his head. "That's a reason," he said.
"All right." Ba.s.so sighed. "The reason is, to annoy your mother. Make her son the most powerful man in the world, whether she likes it or not. What better reason could you ask for?"
Ba.s.sano nodded. "That's a reason," he said. "Coming from you, I'll accept that."
"And you'll do it?"
At that moment, Melsuntha came back in with the brandy and the honey-cakes.
She arrived late one evening, just as the clerks were putting out the lamps and getting ready to leave. They sent for the duty guard sergeant, who wasn't even aware that the First Citizen had a sister. She demanded to speak to his superior; he went away and came back with the only officer still in the building, a young Cazar lieutenant who ran the Pay Office. He knew the First Citizen had a sister, and that they didn't get on. He sent a clerk to ask Ba.s.so if he wanted to see her.
"What?" he said, looking up from his work.
"Says she's your sister, sir," the lieutenant said nervously. It was the first time he'd been in the great man's presence, and legends about what happened to officers who disturbed Him when he was working were many and exaggerated.
"Oh." Ba.s.so laid down his pen. He looked mildly stunned. "Send her up. No, just a moment. Give me a few minutes, then show her into the cabinet room. Get someone to light some lamps, and a fire."
The cabinet room had been gorgeously decorated by Ba.s.so's father; it was one of his few lasting achievements. The walls were covered with a fresco of Trade and Liberty presenting gold crowns to the personified Vesani people; the buxom, slightly stout woman who represented the Republic was supposed to be either the painter's wife or the First Citizen's mistress (some historians later claimed that she was both). The table, cut from a single board of Auxentine walnut, had been taken from an unarmed Auxentine merchant ship as reparations for the expulsion of some minor Vesani diplomat. The chairs had been borrowed from the Studium, the unwanted gift of a rich and tiresome benefactor two hundred years earlier; they were gilded and painted, in the late Rationalist style. The ceiling, which Ba.s.so's father hadn't got around to altering, was gilded mosaic, left over from when the room was the Chancellor's private chapel. Ba.s.so had made them remove the gilt-ivory statue of Prosperity that his father had borrowed from the Sutlers' Guild; he hadn't given it back to the Sutlers, and it was crated up somewhere in the bas.e.m.e.nt, along with the rest of the junk.
"Ba.s.sano told me," she said, before he could open his mouth.
"Fine," Ba.s.so said. "I thought he probably would."
She sat down, perching on the edge of one of the Studium chairs. She was thinner than when he'd seen her last, and her hair was going grey at the sides, something he found hard to accept. She looked like a stallholder in the market.
"I won't allow it."